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X-WR-CALNAME:Centre for Book Cultures and Publishing
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/centre-for-book-cultures-and-publishing
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Centre for Book Cultures and Publishing
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TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
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DTSTART:20230326T010000
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230911
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20231209
DTSTAMP:20260512T141605
CREATED:20230910T095507Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231101T163407Z
UID:1876-1694390400-1702079999@research.reading.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Up in Arms: posters for protest\, solidarity\, engagement and action
DESCRIPTION:Up in Arms has been curated to align with our annual conference\, ‘Publishing Anti-fascism’ convened and organised by Ellen Pilsworth. \nThe exhibition includes material from the collection of twentieth-century posters from the Lettering\, Printing and Graphic Design Collections in the Department of Typography & Graphic Communication. It displays posters from a range of sources\, some designed by well-known designers including Robin Fior and David King. The exhibition was curated and designed by Clara Fidler-Brown as part of her experience as a Collections Assistant\, with support from Ellen Pilsworth\, Emma Minns\, Sue Walker and Geoff Wyeth. \n  \n\nThe Up in Arms exhibition space in the Department of Typography & Graphic Communication \n 
URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/centre-for-book-cultures-and-publishing/event/up-in-arms-posters-for-protest-solidarity-engagement-and-action/
LOCATION:Department of Typography & Graphic Communication\, University of Reading\, RG6 6BZ
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://research.reading.ac.uk/centre-for-book-cultures-and-publishing/wp-content/uploads/sites/138/2023/09/upinarms.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Sue%20Walker":MAILTO:s.f.walker@reading.ac.uk
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20231028T093000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20231028T163000
DTSTAMP:20260512T141605
CREATED:20231026T140606Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231026T140812Z
UID:2051-1698485400-1698510600@research.reading.ac.uk
SUMMARY:The Children's Books History Society Study Day on Families in  Children's Literature (Part 2)
DESCRIPTION:The Children’s Books History Society Study Day \nSaturday\, 28th October 2023\n9.30am-4.30pm \nVenue:\nChurch Hall of the Crown Court Church of Scotland\nRussell Street\nCovent Garden\nLondon\nWC2B 5EZ \nThe theme for the Study Day is Families in Children’s Literature (Part 2). \nThe Study Day includes the following four talks & costs £25 per person (includes lunch): \n\nBrian Sibley: Tove Jansson’s Family Moomintroll: The family we’d all like to have\nHilary Clare: Charlotte Yonge\, the first writer for teenage girls\n(**Celebrating the bicentenary of the birth of Charlotte Yonge**)\n\nHoward Bailes: The Carey Family: an exploration of the novels of Ronald Welch\nSarah Jardine-Willoughby: The Gatty Family: Close and Talented\n\nTo find out more & to book a place\, please complete the booking form available here. \nSpeaker biographies\nBrian Sibley is an author\, broadcaster and screenwriter\, and has written and presented numerous dramas\, documentaries and features on BBC radio since 1976. He has also written numerous books\, including several books on The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings\, and on children’s writers such as C.S. Lewis. He has also contributed columns and reviews to several newspapers and magazines. He is the President of the Lewis Carroll Society\, and an honorary member of the CBHS\, The Magic Circle and the Tolkien Society. \nHilary Clare read Modern History at St Hugh’s College\, Oxford and subsequently trained as an archivist at the University of North Wales\, Bangor. After a few years working in that field she became a teacher\, and later a professional genealogist. An interest is children’s books in general led to specializing in girls’ school stories\, and also in the Victorian writer Charlotte Mary Yonge. \nHoward Bailes encountered Ronald Welch’s wonderful books as a child and they contributed to his early fascination with history. Although he has plenty of historical and literary interests\, he admits to a certain leaning towards military history\, rather like Ronald himself. For some twenty years he led St Paul’s Girls’ School’s annual tour of the Great War battlefields. Howard’s PhD thesis concerned the Victorian army\, on which he has published\, along with articles on various topics\, a book on the arts-and-crafts architect Gerald Horsley and a history of St Paul’s Girls’ School. \nSarah Jardine-Willoughby is a retired librarian who worked mainly in the University sector\, first at the LSE and then for nearly twenty years at Middlesex University\, and also spent few years as librarian for the Imperial Society of Teachers of Dance. She is an avid book collector of mainly children’s books including Mrs Molesworth\, Charlotte Yonge\, Maria Edgeworth and of course Mrs Ewing & Mrs Gatty. She is the Treasurer of the CBHS and more recently of the Charlotte M Yonge Fellowship
URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/centre-for-book-cultures-and-publishing/event/the-childrens-books-history-society-study-day-on-families-in-childrens-literature-part-2/
LOCATION:Church Hall of the Crown Court Church of Scotland\, Russell Street\, Covent Garden\, London\, WC2B 5EZ
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://research.reading.ac.uk/centre-for-book-cultures-and-publishing/wp-content/uploads/sites/138/2023/10/Study_Day.png
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